I\'m attempting to watch for localstorage:
Template:
token - {{token}}
Script:
computed: {
t
Update: vue-persistent-state is no longer maintained. Fork or look else where if it doesn't fit your bill as is.
If you want to avoid boilerplate (getter/setter-syntax), use vue-persistent-state to get reactive persistent state.
For example:
import persistentState from 'vue-persistent-state';
const initialState = {
token: '' // will get value from localStorage if found there
};
Vue.use(persistentState, initialState);
new Vue({
template: '<p>token - {{token}}</p>'
})
Now token
is available as data in all components and Vue instances. Any changes to this.token
will be stored in localStorage, and you can use this.token
as you would in a vanilla Vue app.
The plugin is basically watcher and localStorage.set
. You can read the code here. It
initialState
available in all Vue instances, andDisclaimer: I'm the author of vue-persistent-state.
localStorage
is not reactive but I needed to "watch" it because my app uses localstorage and didn't want to re-write everything so here's what I did using CustomEvent
.
I would dispatch a CustomEvent
whenever you add something to storage
localStorage.setItem('foo-key', 'data to store')
window.dispatchEvent(new CustomEvent('foo-key-localstorage-changed', {
detail: {
storage: localStorage.getItem('foo-key')
}
}));
Then where ever you need to watch it do:
mounted() {
window.addEventListener('foo-key-localstorage-changed', (event) => {
this.data = event.detail.storage;
});
},
data() {
return {
data: null,
}
}
you can do it in two ways,
by using vue-ls and then adding the listener on storage keys, with
Vue.ls.on('token', callback)
or
this.$ls.on('token', callback)
by using storage event listener of DOM:
document.addEventListener('storage', storageListenerMethod);
The VueJs site has a page about this. https://vuejs.org/v2/cookbook/client-side-storage.html
They provide an example. Given this html template
<template>
<div id="app">
My name is <input v-model="name">
</div>
<template>
They provide this use of the lifecycle mounted
method and a watcher.
const app = new Vue({
el: '#app',
data: {
name: ''
},
mounted() {
if (localStorage.name) {
this.name = localStorage.name;
}
},
watch: {
name(newName) {
localStorage.name = newName;
}
}
});
The mounted
method assures you the name
is set from local storage if it already exists, and the watcher allows your component to react whenever the name in local storage is modified. This works fine for when data in local storage is added or changed, but Vue will not react if someone wipes their local storage manually.
LocalStorage or sessionStorage are not reactive. Thus you can't put a watcher on them. A solution would be to store value from a store state if you are using Vuex for example. Ex:
SET_VALUE:(state,payload)=> {
state.value = payload
localStorage.setItem('name',state.value)
or
sessionStorage.setItem('name',state.value)
}
Sure thing! The best practice in my opinion is to use the getter / setter syntax to wrap the localstorage in.
Here is a working example:
HTML:
<div id="app">
{{token}}
<button @click="token++"> + </button>
</div>
JS:
new Vue({
el: '#app',
data: function() {
return {
get token() {
return localStorage.getItem('token') || 0;
},
set token(value) {
localStorage.setItem('token', value);
}
};
}
});
And a JSFiddle.